Physical Exploration: including weight, height, index waist/hip (the abdominal perimeter is measured between the last floating rib and the iliac crest), assessment of changes in body fat distribution,... [ Time Frame: weeks 24 and 48 ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]

Different therapeutic strategies have been investigated to improve adherence to treatment and reduce toxicity. Both the reduction in the number of doses and the number of daily tablets have led to an improvement in therapeutic compliance. Similarly, the administration of new treatment regimens with a reduced number of tablets a day and without NTRI may be clinically useful in improving compliance with HAART and limiting NTRI-associated toxicity. These would comprise combinations of a PI, boosted with ritonavir, plus a non-Nucleoside and single therapy with PIs boosted with ritonavir.

In this regard, the results obtained with lopinavir/ritonavir and with atazanavir/ritonavir are very promising and open up a possible channel of research with other PIs boosted with low doses of ritonavir.

There are other PIs whose antiretroviral efficacy has also been demonstrated, such as saquinavir, but whose economic cost is much lower. Furthermore, saquinavir has a low toxicity profile, and the availability of saquinavir 500 mg facilitates comfortable administration, since it makes it possible to reduce the number of daily tablets to more than half.

Moreover, it is important to take into account that the incidence of mutations that confer resistance to saquinavir on patients that fail on combinations including this PI is very low, which makes it possible to reuse the drug in future treatment regimens or salvage patients with other PI All these characteristics (high intrinsic potency, low number of tablets, low toxicity, low potential of selection of resistant viral strains in combination with ritonavir, and low economic cost) make single therapy with the new formulation of saquinavir, boosted with low doses of ritonavir, a possible therapeutic option as maintenance strategy in HIV-infected patients with maintained suppression of the viral load.

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Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00379405